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Nuttby Mountain is a Canadian peak [1] in the Cobequid Mountains and at 360.6 metres is one of the highest elevation points on the mainland portion of Nova Scotia.Its longstanding claim to be the highest peak was disproven in 2017 when it was discovered that Higgins Mountain near Folly Lake is 363.7 metres and an unnamed peak near Hart Lake is 365.02 metres.
Dylan Ehler (born April 16, 2017) was three years old when he went missing from the residence of his grandmother, Dorothy Parsons, on Elizabeth Street in Truro, Nova Scotia. His mother, Ashley Brown, had gone to meet a friend for coffee and had dropped the boy off to be babysat by Parsons.
Jones enlisted as a private with the 106th Battalion (Nova Scotia Rifles), CEF on June 19, 1916, in Truro, Nova Scotia.He had to lie about his age saying his birthday was on March 29, 1877, which would have made him 39 instead of his real age 58.
Lawrence Paul (2013) Lawrence Alexander Paul (July 23, 1934 – May 28, 2014) was a Chief of Millbrook First Nation in Nova Scotia, Canada. First elected a band councillor in 1974, he became chief in 1984 and served continuously in that position until 2012.
The Nova Scotia Railway opened its line from Richmond (in present-day Halifax's North End) to Truro in December 1858.For the first decade of rail service to the town, the NSR served passengers from a small wooden structure located approximately where the present-day station is situated.
Sportspeople from Truro, Nova Scotia (23 P) Pages in category "People from Truro, Nova Scotia" The following 55 pages are in this category, out of 55 total.
In June 1867, the Nova Scotia Railway opened its "Eastern Line" from Truro through New Glasgow to its terminus at the passenger and cargo wharf in Pictou Landing. In 1882 the "Eastern Extension" of the Intercolonial Railway was opened from New Glasgow to Mulgrave on the Strait of Canso , placing New Glasgow on the mainline between Cape Breton ...
Woman in Victoria park, ca. 1915. The park was established in 1887 when Susan Waddell Stevens donated 25 acres (100,000 m 2) of land for the creation of a public park.The town of Truro formed a board of trustees and named Sir Adams G. Archibald as chairperson; the park was named Victoria Park in honour of Queen Victoria, the monarch at that time.